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Karabakh on the Neva River

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  • Karabakh on the Neva River

    WPS Agency, Russia
    June 5 2009

    KARABAKH ON THE NEVA RIVER

    by Natalia Portyakova, Natalia Kostenko

    MEDVEDEV MANAGED TO ARRANGE NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA
    AND AZERBAIJAN; Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan discussed
    Nagorno-Karabakh in St.Petersburg.

    Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan Serj Sargsjan and Ilham Aliyev
    discussed Karabakh, yesterday. Their meeting lasted almost 2.5
    hours. It took place within the framework of the St.Petersburg
    International Economic Forum at first and continued in the presence of
    OSCE Minsk Group chairmen. Later that night, these two leaders met
    with President Dmitry Medvedev separately.

    Yerevan and Baku continue their efforts to solve the problem of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Sargsjan told journalists when his meeting with
    Aliyev was finally over. "We keep looking for ways and means to ensure
    safety of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh on its ancestral land and its
    right to determine its own future," he added. Aliyev declined comment.

    The meeting in St.Petersburg became the fifth round of the
    Azerbaijani-Armenian negotiations. The first round had taken place in
    St.Petersburg a year ago when Medvedev's peace-making efforts resulted
    in the so called Meindorf Declaration (November 2008). Both parties
    confirmed their allegiance to a political settlement and readiness to
    activate the talks.

    A Presidential Administration official told this newspaper before the
    meeting in St.Petersburg that expecting any breakthroughs from it was
    no use. What really counted was that the parties were ready to
    continue the dialogue encouraged by Moscow, he said.

    "No, we do not aspire to any new agreements or any discussion of the
    problem in detail at this point," Presidential Aide Sergei Prikhodko
    explained.

    Yerevan and Baku meanwhile uphold polar views on how to tackle the
    problem of Nagorno-Karabakh. "The Armenians make an emphasis on the
    right to self-determination, Azerbaijan on the principle of
    territorial integrity," an Azerbaijani diplomat said.

    Azerbaijan insists on the return of seven occupied districts to it and
    return of refugees to their homes before the dialogue itself over the
    status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia says that the order should be
    reversed: status first, all the rest afterwards.

    "Any compromise with Baku will hurt Sargsjan himself," political
    scientist Aleksei Vlasov observed. "On the other hand, Moscow cannot
    afford to forsake its diplomatic efforts because the United States
    will certainly try to win Azerbaijan and Armenia over otherwise."

    "The United States have been actively brainwashing Turkey to open the
    border with Armenia," Azerbaijani political scientist Ali Abasov
    said. "Moscow does not want it happening, of course, because of the
    risk to lose Armenia."

    Source: Vedomosti, No 102, June 5, 2009, p. A2
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